
Meaning of E-Waste
:
Electronic waste or e-waste describes discarded electrical or
electronic devices. Used electronics which are destined for reuse, resale,
salvage, recycling or disposal are also considered as e-waste. Informal
processing of electronic waste in developing countries may cause serious health
and pollution problems, as these countries have limited regulatory oversight of
e-waste processing.
Material considered as
E-waste:
Electronic scrap
components, such as CRTs, may contain contaminants such as lead, cadmium, beryllium, or brominated
flame retardants. Even in
developed countries recycling
and disposal of e-waste may involve significant risk to workers and communities and
great care must be taken to avoid unsafe exposure in recycling operations and
leaking of materials such as heavy metals from landfillsand incinerator ashes.
HEALTH
AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF E-WASTE
Lead
exerts
toxic effects on various systems in the body such as the central (organic
affective syndrome) and peripheral nervous systems (motor neuropathy), the
hemopoietic system (anemia), the genitourinary system (capable of causing
damage to all parts of nephron) and the reproductive systems (male and female)
Mercury
causes
damage to the genitourinary system (tubular dysfunction), the central and
peripheral nervous systems as well as the fetus. When inorganic mercury spreads
out in the water, it is transformed into methylated mercury, which
bio-accumulates in living organisms and concentrates through the food chain,
particularly by fish.
Cadmium
is
a potentially long-term cumulative poison. Toxic cadmium compounds accumulate
in the human body, especially in the kidneys. There is evidence of the role of
cadmium and beryllium in carcinogenicity.
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH)
Affects
lung, skin and bladder. Epidemiological studies in the past on occupational
exposure to PAH provide sufficient evidence of the role of PAH in the induction
of skin and lung cancers.
ORGANIZATIONS/NETWORKS
WORKING ON E-WASTE ISSUES
1. Knowledge bank for e-waste management in India.
The
Asia Pro Ecoprogramme supported by the European Commission is dedicated to the
environmental performance in Asian Economic sectors through the exchange of
environmental policies, technologies and practices and to promote sustainable
investment and trade between the European Union Member States and South Asia,
South-East Asia and China.
2. The E-waste Guide, India (www.ewaste.in).
An
Initiative of the Indo–German–Swiss Partnership [Ministry of Environment and
Forests, German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development and
Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs] It is designed to serve as an
information resource on e-waste as well as a common collaborative work platform
for stakeholders.
3. National Solid Waste Association of India (NSWAI) (www.nswai.com).
A
leading professional non-profit organization in the field of solid-waste
management, including toxic and hazardous waste and also biomedical waste in
India. It was formed in 1996. Its objectives include development of solid-waste
management as a profession, research and development, development of expertise,
standards and goods practices with regards to solid-waste management. Some of
the others include improvement in legislation and creating awareness and
community involvement.
4. Toxics Link (www.toxicslink.org).
A
Delhi-based environment activist group with a mission of working for
environmental justice and freedom from toxics. It is also actively involved in
creating public awareness on environmental issues through publications,
reports, articles and environment news bulletins besides organizing various events.
5.
Others are stEP Workweb, WEEE Forum, Clean India, Indian Environmental Society,
INDIA HABITAT CENTRE and Microbial Biotechnology Area of Tata Energy Research
Institute
Electronic Waste – recycling laptops, computers and other
electronic equipment.
Most electronic waste
goes through a recycling system called a WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic
Equipment), which not only recycles 95-98%, by weight, of all ewaste passed
through it, but ensures that any data left on hard drives and memories are
thoroughly destroyed too.
§ Picking Shed – first all the items are sorted
by hand and batteries and copper are extracted for quality control.
§ Initial Size Reduction Process – items are
shredded into pieces as small as 100mm to prepare the ewaste to be thoroughly
sorted. This is also where the data destruction takes place.
§ Secondary Size Reduction – the small debris is
shaken to ensure that it is evenly spread out on the conveyor belt, before it
gets broken down even more. Any dust extracted is disposed of in an
environmentally friendly way.
§ Overband Magnet – using magnets, steel and
iron are removed from the debris.
§ Metallic & Non-Metallic Content –
aluminium, copper and brass are separated from the non-metallic content. The
metallic can then be reused and resold as raw materials.
§ Water Separation – water is used to separate
plastic from the glass content. Once divided all raw materials can then be
resold.
Recycling Electronics
If
donation for reuse or repair is not a viable option, households and businesses
can send their used electronics for recycling. Recyclers recover more
than 100 million pounds of materials from electronics each year. Recycling
electronics helps reduce pollution that would be generated while manufacturing
a new product and the need to extract valuable and limited virgin resources. It
also reduces the energy used in new product manufacturing.
One thousand or more
municipalities offer computer and electronics collections as part of household
hazardous waste collections, special events, or other arrangements. In
addition, public and private organizations have emerged that accept computers and
other electronics for recycling. Depending on where you live and the amount of
equipment you have, the best recycling option might be a county recycling
drop-off center, TV repair shop, charitable organization, electronics recycling
company, or even your local electronics retailer, which might collect used
products and send them to a recycler. You can learn more about local
electronics recyclers and collection events at EIA Environment – Consumer Education Initiative .
Many electronics manufacturers
are accepting used household electronics for recycling. In some cases, these
services are provided free-of-charge. Asset management and recovery programs
have been available to major corporations and large purchasers of electronic
equipment for quite some time. Now, electronics manufacturers are beginning to
offer similar services for households and small businesses. The consumer pays
to mail the product back. Fees keep changing, but generally range from seven
dollars up. Some manufacturers and retailers are offering free or for-a-fee
events in communities.
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